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  • INDIANA NEWSPAPERS INCORPORATED THE HUNTINGTON HERA.LO THE HUNTINGTON PRESS HUNTINGTON. INDIAN,- THE REPORTER BUI LDING TH I:. VINCl!.NNES SUN THE VINCENNES COMMERC(Al. VINCENNES• INOIANA LEBANON, :: INDIANA "l'HE LIN'l'ON CITIZEN LINTON
  • Press
  • important cartoons printed as tar as they affect the eyes of important people. Berryman should be given a chance to like you. Attached,as comedy mainly, is another cartoon. see how 011r Detroit line is working in PM. on Smith,from Detroit, given you
  • billions of prlvn.te ohari t7 to Eur ope were not thos e ·mo raised t..he tariffs or those who floated the bonds. Vost of the bill ·.1as f1nal.ly pa.id by tlle ft:.rmer, the worker, the small banker, nnd the SlAal.l investor. F.ilrope finally got free
  • be crushed. Roosevelt be- .,::., ; .,· lieved in freedom of speech, press .- ·~,w-:··•': ·•:•· and religion-which we in Ameri- £L ca hold dearer than life· itself. · ML Adolf Hitler was the implacable W~} enemy of all democracy. Fr~nk• ,,,...,,., lin
  • racket is over and he returns to normalcy as an American citizen? Is this the price of peace and speed and democracy in the defense of America? An intelligent, fanatical, class-driven Lewis presses a button at Detroit, at Buffalo, at Bridgeport, at Los
  • Wallace Learning to Fly . AHoclated Press Pboto AFTER FIRST LESSON-Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wal• lace steps from the cockpit of a• training plane at National Airport after completing his first flying lesson. His instructor is Paul E
  • Texas tor DeJ1Ter. Kansaa City; St. Louisa other points anu Indianapolis1 Detroit; ButtaloJ Roo ester. Now York1 Pittsburgh• . . .. ,. (liote a Tom. you atartod so thing. Thia baby erldently has gotten the gbeen ll ht to go out and f'ix up
  • Baldv,1n should contact King and Associated Press, and Charles Green should contact United Press at Austin. The editorial which Baldwin has is the bads of the int'orme.tion which should go in adve.nco to the mind of A. P. and u. p. people
  • with the strain on c apitalism which a world war ceasing to war will certainly place there, vb.a may believe that capital can stand such a strain? We must laeep the best there is of capital. sure to lose none of it. Let us be If that capital is free and does
  • with the minjnn1m of repression; that the second is to ex,­ press and act proportionate values in the use of time and emphasis;: that such approach, of course, will encourage intellectual honesty, intellectual curios­ ity, kindness, clarity, and above all
  • IN .HYDEPARK PARK ABOUT EIGHTY MILES FRO M NEWYORK UNABLE GET STREET ADDRESS STOP HAVE BEEN · , PRESS -THE CONFERR I N.G WI TH -UN I TED - - STOP FERGUSON OUT OF TOWN STOP NEWYORK CENTRAL BEST ROUTE GOVERNOR IS IN ALBA~Y TONIGHT= ---------~: A J
  • "construction ahead travel at your own risk :1 and "construction ahead illegal to pass and at your own risk" This cotmtry is as open to individualism and free wheeling as the East so o.ften seems cramped . You move at an averas e rate of 60 miles and so does
  • CONVENTION : A meeting of par­ REPUBLICAN PARTY : The party of Lincoln andtrust-bustingTheodore Roosevelt,oftencalled "G. O.P." (Grand OldParty).Now considered the "conservative" J:)8l1Y {last J)reeident, Hoover), it likes free enterprise. Once "bolationiat
  • herself." 1 I want Americana to be well clothed, well fed, well housed and free from fear. I belleve that democracy and cooperation with I ~ - ·• r ~ -- •• - ---- - --- other people• through the United Natlona can ■ecure tbe■e condl• tlona. I
  • ; in it. The psyohological point here obviously is the President. This may be handled, but attached to the Senator, an alive press specialist as a secretary and tra-geling companion who does not become, and is not known, as a press representative. The moment a man becomes
  • the bolting free stater.s. · Again, the question, where do the so.uthern voters go from here?, Their_ only path is t_o vote for a Democr~tic ell:ctoral state !)ledged to cast its ballots against . Harry _T ruman m the Electoral College. An4 if Truman
  • June 10, contingent pa.rti< Security upon Eastport'! being able ~o ob- Gene· Russia's tain the pr operty and certain were ~d Nations Federal m achinery free or for a from the politl­ token payment. The War Assets w territorial Administration has se
  • was left free to erect tariff and trade barriers as it pleased. Many nations, including our own, tried to buy as little as possible from the rest of the world and to sell as much as possible. European countries that normally bought wheat and meat from
  • that having fulfilled its usefulness, it should dissolve into the war effort-with its presses and its typewriters, its trucks and its 400 employees. It was still a financial failure but its owner, Mr. Marshall Field, could afford to write off the loss
  • as ff he leisure . someday gather itself had been altogether .free of its togetller to move a,ainn .Japan/ destructive· futluence. -· did not· follo,v up its :warnings to .. •,Uj'I the -doctrine.of lhe ·p3Slive see .what had .been done about 1~ . 4~e11
  • . President Truman stopped me in tre receiving line at the Women I s Press Club Reception last Thursday evening to compliment the fight I made with oth3 r Senators against the Republicans violating the spirit of the new Reorganizaticn of Congress Act
  • coated stiff with ice. The tug cap'n sets my barge free a bit too soon, see! SAILOR1 Harbor scum are great at yarns, hut deep sea men handle rope faster than their tongues. scow CAPTAIN, The dock's comin' towards me fast, see! If the rope's too stiff
  • ~ressiOA. The greatest in trWD.ent ia what vag , 1J 1a calle4 publio opinioa. The aeoond 1a the press and ra41o . The third oonsista of •xprea ions ot the Demooratio and Republioan Parties ud their ao-oall 4 le dera . I take thea three great potential 1
  • sources throughout the country on any information of s i gnif icance that any cabinet offi cial or the President might need for decision about any person or thing . Every press agent of every department should be place d by h im or vetoed by him
  • learned this it is impossible for most Americans to conoeive of an America not free . One oannot separate the thought of the future of democracy from the thought of the continuity of our own country as we know it . .. .. Being an American is a state
  • , mm.·e intimate rela tionship is curtain to continue and to grow. The t-:oscow Conference is only one expression of it. 'i'here will be others--1n a ction as v1ell as in words. Of course 1 t :iis. growth has not been free of opposition, of setbacks
  • to the Georgia Press Institute at the Un:i\ersity of Georgia. This will be before the student body . I am to speak in Atlanta the evening of the 22nd, to an oil group on "Foreign Policy", and t he next day at noon, probably to a Business and Professional Women
  • , "What did you reply?• House said, "Having known the Jap in Versailles and having corresponded with him since, I felt free to say, 'I think Japan mis­ takes the spirit of America if she believes that we are so peaoe-lovizg that we will take aeything
  • Press
  • D. Roosevelt. I want a moment to thank the press of South Texas-­ the Houston Post, the Houston Chronicle. the Houston Press. and the Port Arthur News--whioh has seen in iq candidacy tor the Senate the effort of one to serve under
  • , with a San Angelo dateline, follows.) · 'I had to reply tha~ Lyndon . ment. He appraised himself better Johnson is without an equal in than anyone else. He said: '"I a room ·with 10 to 20 people trying to solve a crucial prob- · am a free man, an American
  • liability, to forward this message over the llnes of any other company when necessary to reach Its destination. 4. Domestic messages and Incoming cable messages will be dellvered free within one-half mile or the company's office In towns of 6,000 population
  • of Domestic Moral and Public Relations would then go the problem of putting the suggestions or the General Committee into effect. These might be of the nature ofa 1. Radio, press, moving pictures, on ways of handling a plan of of life which involved a year
  • ~tures are assembled through printing machines and presses., for sale to subscribers. So the editorial depart­ ment. when looked a.t _on the individual paper's balance .sheet., is listed simply as a necessary expense. ActuaU.r the editorial department
  • t w s not It can not. feel that way . But the yout.h of Americanin it.a freedom that. comes only to free men , knows that it is the strength and the soul which upholds the light of the leader and the _ _ _ _ that is to speak the best to come
  • , clothing doubt, " Mr. Johnson, now . at, the front~ and dependent on the behindand shelter are provided free, that · the•lines effort · to keep the war · · is a pitiably small amount for the . machine 'going, realizes as keenly , richest nation in the world
  • that way. But the youth of Amerioa in its f reedom that comas only to free men, It was not taught that way . It oan not knows that it is the st rengt h and the soul whioh upholds the light ot the leader and the voioe that is to epeak the beat to come
  • ' s free op Jortwiit7 to all program? Peopl~ here w~nt to know where you st.nd on white supremacy at once . No more we..,17-wouthed ousiness . They are oall­ ini Coke m•ly-mouth •nd say that Johnson has not gone f~r enough . 7--Please hurry and endorse